The Scotsman

Cauld Blast Orchestra go back to the future, with bonus tracks

- Jimgilchri­st For more informatio­n, https:// cauldblast­orchestra.bandcamp.com and www.greentrax.com

It is a faintly worrying 31 years since that wonderfull­y protean entity known as the Cauld Blast Orchestra released its first album, Savage Dance, a second, Durga’s Feast, following four years later. Once described as “uncharted territory, born in Scotland but without frontiers,” the band played its last gig in 2005 and both albums have longsince been unavailabl­e.

However, Cauld Blast saxophonis­t Steve Kettley has now re-released them both as digital downloads on Bandcamp – “Not so much as a money-making venture but to once again make this great music available.”

Both downloads include unreleased bonus tracks – Durga’s Feast featuring three from a never completed third album and two on Savage Dance including a rumbustiou­s collaborat­ion with the late Michael Marra.

The feverishly eclectic eightpiece was formed by composer and clarinetti­st Karen Wimhurst in 1989 to play her music for Communicad­o Theatre Company’s “surreal bacchanale” Jock Tamson’s Bairns, which opened the newly converted Tramway during Glasgow’s Year of Culture in 1990. While fusion may now be the order of the day, back then nobody had sounded like this – and, frankly, nobody does still.

The CBO combined personnel from the folk, jazz, rock and classical worlds, with Kettley and Wimhurst joined by violinist Anne Wood, pianist and tuba player Iain Johnstone, cellist Ron Shaw, guitarist Jack Evans, concertina player Norman Chalmers and drummer Mike Travis.

Kettley can boast wide-ranging credential­s of his own. His jazz-rock outfit Orange Claw Hammer recently released its second album of Captain Beefheart covers and he’s currently recording with harpist Savourna Stevenson. A founder member of the popular Salsa Celtica, his theatre work has included collaborat­ions with playwright and former Makar Liz Lochhead.

He retains, however, a particular fondness for the CBO, whose music hasn’t dated, “simply because it was such a mixture of genres. We were one of the first cross-genre groups.” Although attracting critical acclaim, he reckons that it was possibly the band’s gleeful genre-crunching that hindered it from gaining the wider popularity it deserved.

One only has to listen to the albums to appreciate their inventivel­y multifario­us nature. The darting busyness of Wimhurst’s Reels Within Wheels might give way to a muscular Kettley excursion such as his wonderfull­y titled March of the Undecided. There is the Satie-esque amble of Shaw’s Belvedere, then the swirling drama of Johnstone’s Tango for a Drowning Man, while an enraged snorting of sax leads to the hypnotic delicacy of African thumb piano for The Quaich – the number with which the group closed both the Communicad­o show and its own gigs.

“As a composer it was an amazing instrument­al palette to work with,” Kettley recalls. “You might think that a composer thinks of a tune first. With that band, I would think of a combinatio­n of instrument­s first. The tune would come out of that.”

Continuing in retrospect­ive mood, the Scottish folk label Greentrax marks its 35th anniversar­y by re-releasing a compilatio­n it first issued in 1989, the same year as the Cauld Blast’s formation. The matter-of-factly titled Music and Song of Scotland was a showcase for the fledgling label establishe­d by newly retired police inspector Ian Green.

Greentrax went on to release almost 500 albums. The advent of digital downloadin­g and streaming has seen the company retrench, however, and it’s a sign of the times that many of the albums from which these 19 tracks have been selected are now deleted or available on download only.

Here, however, are fiddler-piper and prolific composer Ian Hardie, singer-songwriter­s Archie Fisher and Iain Mackintosh, the peerless Jean Redpath, sets from the Mccalmans, Aly Bain and Phil Cunningham and Catherine-ann Macphee’s magnificen­t Canan Nan Gaidheal, while the band Ceolbeg pays tribute to the late Gordon Duncan with his Sleeping Tune.

The fact that Redpath, Hardie, Duncan and Mackintosh are no longer with us adds a certain bitterswee­t quality. Happily, their music flows on, and this compilatio­n offers a snapshot of a moment in time in a burgeoning Scottish music scene.

As a composer, the Cauld Blast Orchestra was an amazing instrument­al palette to work with

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 ??  ?? The eight-piece Cauld Blast Orchestra was formed in 1989
The eight-piece Cauld Blast Orchestra was formed in 1989

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